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Well, we had to evacuate our three year old home last year due to fire. The wind shifted and we got lucky… others, not so much.why is fire bad?


They are public and have stayed public as they have been given value.What the hell are you talking about?
If yer Uncle charged competitive lease and extraction rates instead of 1/10 of commercial lease rates, your argument would resonate. Leasing of public lands in it's current form is merely a subsidy to the lessee.They are public and have stayed public as they have been given value.
Un Sam gets lease money from those wells, adding value to the equation, among other benefits… roads and bridges funded by the industry. Contributions for re-establishment of habitat and wildlife forage are also benefits.
Are there drawbacks? Sure…
As a dude who got off topic in this thread about fire, I concur. I started a thread on wildfire management, and I saw someone else start one about closing land for public safety yesterday, so let's take ot over there.Can we just stop using this thread?
Start another thread for these other topics.
I just a second response from Sen. Jerry Moran of Kansas from an email is sent last week. The first email I got basically had the tune of "Kansas doesnt have BLM land so I dont care." Second email they changed there tune to "Kansans care about public and lots of email is how I know that." Wierd.
Same response I got on the no BLM..I just a second response from Sen. Jerry Moran of Kansas from an email is sent last week. The first email I got basically had the tune of "Kansas doesnt have BLM land so I dont care." Second email they changed there tune to "Kansans care about public and lots of email is how I know that." Wierd.
I got a response Marshall saying he supported hunting and public lands. Rep Mann never responded to me.I never had Moran respond, the same with Estes, except for an acknowledgement of getting my email opinion. Dr Marshall did respond, with some assurances that public land is important to him.
It's a good thought but I can't see any politician willing to die on that hill. Not enough pressure nationally. I bet the majority of the voting public had no idea what even happened.Is it crazy to try to build on the recent publicity around this and to try to get bi-partisan legislation passed to stop any future sale or EO from bringing this up anytime soon? Make each Senator go on the record and everyone in the house before the next election cycle?
I almost want to discourage sharing of this narrative, even if we know it is BS. I warned that urban Democrats will gladly jump on board the train because they never saw a Federal hand-out they didn't like. AEI view should be taken with a grain of salt. The real problem is tax policy that drives behaviors. AEI will never suggest that we should fix the tax policy. Everything else is local. Building fees and permitting costs can be changed but you can never avoid the NIMBY.![]()
Utah Sen. Mike Lee Says Selling Off Public Lands Will Solve the West’s Housing Crisis. Past Sales Show Otherwise.
Last month, Lee introduced a now-removed amendment to Trump’s policy megabill that mandated the sale of up to 3 million acres. It did little to address the challenges of building affordable housing on public land.www.propublica.org
But this spring, Lee found support from unlikely places: the coastal elites he previously railed against seemed open to some of his ideas. The arguments in favor of privatization and development use a word of the season: abundance. Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson’s bestselling book of the same name argues that burdensome regulatory processes have crushed the American housing market. While the authors focus on increasing supply in urban areas, in April, The New York Times ran an op-ed calling for building housing on public lands. That same week, the Times Magazine, in a piece titled “Why America Should Sprawl,” framed outward growth, including through the sale of public lands, as all but inevitable. The American Enterprise Institute, a free-market think tank, has estimated that the nation could build 3 million homes by opening federal land. In December, AEI leaders advocated for federal land sales in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, promising that disposal could “usher in housing abundance and prosperity.”